Status Updates From Diario del año de la peste

by
Status Updates Showing 331-360 of 379

Apriel
is 10% done
It's interesting to read about the plague from someone who was there, even if he was a child when it happened. The reading is a bit dry though and I wish there were some sort of page breaks so it's easier to find a stopping place.
— May 25, 2015 01:21PM
Add a comment

January
is 55% done
So I am about 7 hours into this 12 hour audiobook and I'm really hoping the narrator will get sick soon. Maybe he'll die. Then this will be over.
— Mar 20, 2015 08:10PM
Add a comment

Renee M
is 40% done
This is quite fascinating. Defoe apparently did quite a bit of research and collected many first hand accounts in order to produce this journal of "his" experiences. (He would have been a baby at the time.)
— Feb 14, 2015 07:31AM
Add a comment

Libros Prestados
is on page 260 of 328
Defoe dice que la razón por la que en su tiempo había muchas desavenencias religiosas es porque la sociedad vivía holgadamente y lejos del horror continuo de la muerte. Lo escribió en 1722. Me parto.
— Dec 18, 2014 02:43AM
Add a comment

Libros Prestados
is on page 120 of 328
Qué tío Defoe. Parece como si hubiera sido testigo de los acontecimientos y no se estuviera inventando todo.
— Dec 12, 2014 02:32AM
Add a comment

Kara Louie
is on page 140 of 289
Got to love my new history class
— Jun 12, 2014 08:28AM
Add a comment

Ana
is on page 60 of 289
i remember why i liked defoe as a kid, he writes a surprisingly modern prose for his time
— Apr 01, 2014 02:53AM
Add a comment

Fernanda
is 39% done
Luego de sobrevivir las estadísticas y el continuo purismo de Dafoe, se pone muy bueno.
— Mar 26, 2014 02:03PM
Add a comment

Mairéad (is roaming the Undying Lands)
is on page 123 of 265
Geezus, my prof is right, this sounds like a zombie horror flick without the zombs. D':
— Jan 17, 2014 10:38AM
Add a comment

Mairéad (is roaming the Undying Lands)
is on page 40 of 265
This thing is seriously creepily detailed. I almost cracked up when my prof said this book is the precursor of the zombie break-out plague phenomenon without the zombies. I like to said she hit the stake in that one for sure. [continues being grossed and yet heavily fascinated]
— Jan 08, 2014 09:24PM
Add a comment

Momma Aimee
is on page 30 of 289
fiction. written by author of Robinson Crusoe and Moll Flanders.
— Dec 09, 2013 08:27AM
Add a comment

Amanda
is 61% done
Light bedtime reading to accompany the Open Yale "Epidemics in Western Society" class ;)
— Sep 02, 2013 08:32PM
Add a comment

Jennie K.
is 50% done
The style isn't really linear, which makes it more challenging to get through than it should be, because it's not a dry, impersonal narrative.
— Feb 07, 2013 07:12AM
Add a comment

Inna
is finished
A dreadful plague in London was
In the year sixty-five,
Which swept an hundred thousand souls
Away; yet I alive!
— Sep 08, 2012 12:15PM
Add a comment
In the year sixty-five,
Which swept an hundred thousand souls
Away; yet I alive!

Inna
is on page 218 of 255
For this is to be said of the people of London, that during the whole time of the pestilence the churches or meetings were never wholly shut up, nor did the people decline coming out to the public worship of God, except only in some parishes when the violence of the distemper was more particularly in that parish at that time, and even then no longer than it continued to be so.
— Sep 08, 2012 12:10PM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 198 of 255
. It was indeed a merciful disposition of God, that as the plague began at one end of the town first (as has been observed at large) so it proceeded progressively to other parts, and did not come on this way, or eastward, till it had spent its fury in the West part of the town; and so, as it came on one way, it abated another.
— Sep 08, 2012 12:08PM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 196 of 255
In the first place, the Lord Mayor and the sheriffs, the Court of Aldermen, and a certain number of the Common Council men, or their deputies, came to a resolution and published it, viz., that they would not quit the city themselves, but that they would be always at hand for the preserving good order in every place and for the doing justice on all occasions; as also for the distributing the public charity to the poor
— Sep 08, 2012 12:07PM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 192 of 255
The vigilance of the magistrates was now put to the utmost trial - and, it must be confessed, can never be enough acknowledged on this occasion also; whatever expense or trouble they were at, two things were never neglected in the city or suburbs either : -
(1) Provisions were always to be had in full plenty, and the price not much raised neither, hardly worth speaking.
— Sep 08, 2012 12:05PM
Add a comment
(1) Provisions were always to be had in full plenty, and the price not much raised neither, hardly worth speaking.

Inna
is on page 190 of 255
One thing I cannot omit here, and indeed I thought it was extraordinary, at least it seemed a remarkable hand of Divine justice: viz., that all the predictors, astrologers, fortune-tellers, and what they called cunning-men, conjurers, and the like: calculators of nativities and dreamers of dream, and such people, were gone and vanished; not one of them was to be found.
— Sep 08, 2012 12:04PM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 47 of 255
These terrors and apprehensions of the people led them into a thousand weak, foolish, and wicked things, which they wanted not a sort of people really wicked to encourage them to: and this was running about to fortune- tellers, cunning-men, and astrologers to know their fortune, or, as it is vulgarly expressed, to have their fortunes told them, their nativities calculated, and the like; and this folly presently made
— Sep 08, 2012 11:56AM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 46 of 255
It was, indeed, a time of very unhappy breaches among us in matters of religion. Innumerable sects and divisions and separate opinions prevailed among the people.
— Sep 08, 2012 11:55AM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 13 of 255
The Defoe we prize is not a working journalist but a novelist whose method is that of the working journalist. To be termed 'an imaginative writer' would have terrified him. The purpose of the pen was to render, in seemingly unconsidered immediacy, true events, and if the events were strange and surprising then so much the better.
— Sep 08, 2012 11:47AM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 10 of 255
Prosperous again, a Whig gentleman with a shrewish wife and an oyster-wench mistress, he was in no danger as regarding writing as a mere upper-class hobby. Defoe had urgent things to say.
— Sep 08, 2012 11:39AM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 8 of 255
As it was, Defoe was equipped by training, as well as by temperament, to turn into the first really modern writer, his mind disposed to independence, liberalism, and scientific inquiry, master of five languages (though Latin and Greek not among them), his interests immediate and practical, not classical and remote.
— Sep 08, 2012 12:03AM
Add a comment

Inna
is on page 8 of 255
If Defoe, like the conformists, had been permitted by law to receive the traditional (classical) education of Oxford or Cambridge, he might have become merely a lesser Swift. As it was, Defoe was equipped by training, as well as by temperament, to turn into the first really modern writer, his mind disposed to independence, liberalism, and scientific inquiry, master of five languages (though Latin and Greek not among
— Sep 08, 2012 12:02AM
Add a comment